Commonwealth of Australia · Yeates, N. (2014). The idea of global social policy. In N. Yeates...
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Yeates, N. (2014). The idea of global social policy. In N. Yeates (Ed.) Understanding global social policy (2nd ed.) (pp. 1-18). Bristol, UK. : The Policy Press.
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The idea of global social policy
Nicola Yeates
Overview
This chapter introduces global social policy as a field of academic study and as a political practice. lt contrasts different approaches to the study of social policy in a global context, setting out the essence of globalist approaches to social policy that lie at the heart of this book. The chapter goes on to discuss different perspectives within the field of global social policy and emphasises the importance of historicising global social policy and attending to the different ways in which it plays out across the world. The chapter reviews key themes and debates taken up in the ensuing chapters. Finally, it provides a brief guide to using this book, a summary of the key points covered in the chapter, and suggestions about how to keep up to date with developments in this fast-moving field.
Key concepts Global social policy; globalisation; methodological transnationalism; methodological nationalism
Introduction
The notion that social policy and human welfare are sh aped exclusively by
domestic politics, institutions, policies and policy actors, has, over the last
two decades, been gradually giving way to an understanding that there is an
unmistakably transnational or global dimension to social policy. Global social
politics, organisations, policies, programmes and policy actors are powerfi..il
global social policy: second edition
forces which have a potent influence on domestic social policy, the terms of
social development and the condition of human welfare around the world.
They affect every day lives in a myriad of ways, having an impact on individual
and collective subjectivities, shaping m;�or social institutions, framing policy
responses and influencing social outcomes in w:�ys that, although not always
immedi:�tely perceptible, are nevertheless significant.
Building on the first edition of Undcrstandinx ,�;loha/ social policy (Yeates,
.200H), this second edition provides an up-to-date, comprehensive and
accessible collection of research-based chapters that bring alive and illuminate
key issues, deh�1tes and themes in contemporary global social policy.The
hook is tangibly concerned with the 'what' , 'who', 'why' and 'how' of global
social policy.The 11 chapters in this volume examine a wide range of policy
areas and issues to uncover what global social policy is, who is involved in
making it, whv it is needed, how it is enacted, what its consequences and
impacts are, and what challenges lie ahead.
The remainder of this chapter provides an introduction to the book as a
wbok.lt discusses the various impetuses in the process of rdraming social
policy as a global subject and what the prefix 'global' in global social policy
stgnifics and implies.lt distinguishes the key features ofglobal social policy as
a field of academic <;tudy and research and as political practice. It introduces
each of the chapters, and concludes with a summary of key points, guidance
on usi ng this book and questiom tor discussion.
Globalisation, social science and policy studies
Clobal approJclws to social policy are located in an approach to social
science that emphasises how social institutions, activities, practices and
relations cut across, or transcend, individual countries: methodological
transnationalism. M ethodologi cal transnationalism contrasts with
methodological nationalism that f{xuses on social institutions, activities
and ties at the level of individual countries. The broad differences between
these two kind' of conceptual grammar and what they mean for the
study of social pohcies and welt;1re systems are set out in Box 1.1.
The idea of global social policy
Box 1.1: Contrasting approaches in social science and social policy
Methodological nationalism
Methodological transnationalism
Emphasises the institutions, links, activities and social processes occurring within countries
Emphasises the institutions, links,
Focuses on the ways in which national welfare states, welfare systems and social policies are influenced by domestic politics, policy actors, policies and institutions Focuses on the ways in which national welfare states, welfare
activities and processes systems and social policies are cutting across influenced by global politics, policy countries actors, policies and institutions
The development of Social Policy as a subject of academic study and
research has been located in methodological nationalism, and h as given rise
to a rich interdisciplinary field of study with a distinctive body of theory,
concepts, methods and research of practical use across the social sciences, for
practitioners and policy makers. From today 's vantage point, the assumption
that social institutions, policies and practices can be understood exclusively
in terms of the domestic realm, it renders invisible the ways in which
international actors, institutions and processes of international integration
influence the content and deve lopment of social policy and the social
organisation of welfare. Definitions of social policy as policies enacted in
the domestic realm and influenced by domestic considerations neglect and
actively obscure the international and transnational dimensions of social
policy and the wider global context of social policy making, such as the
critical significance of cross-border and multilateral spheres of governance
as sites of social politics and policy making.
Over the last two decades, the conscious embrace of methodological
transnationalism has successfully opened up alternative ways of studying
key global social institutions and the role of social policy in human wdf11·e. It has been especially formative in capturing a range of transnational social
phenomena- often associated with globalisation (Box 1.2). These range
from transnational, border-spanning flows of capital , goods, services, people
and ideas, to social formations that channel these social, economic and
ideational flows and interactions, links and ties connecting people and places
in more than one country, to modes of consciousness that reconstruct a sense
of place and locality and give rise to the experience of the world as a shared
place (Vertovec, 1999) (see also Table 1.1). It has also helped identify a range
of transnational policy actors and border-spanning entities. Table 1.2 sets out
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five broad kinds of border-spanning entities, along with their motivation
and examples. T hese all feature in the chapters of this volume.
Table 1.1: Conceptual premises of transnationalism
Social morphology
Type of consciousness
Mode of cultural reproduction
Avenue of capital
Site of political engagement
Reconstruction of 'place' or locality
Social formations spanning borders (for example, ethnic diasporas and networks)
Identity, memory, awareness; dual/multiple identifications and awareness of multi-locality
Fluidity of constructed styles, social institutions and everyday practices, often channelled through global media and communications (creolisation, hybridity, cultural translation as seen in fash ion, music and film)
Networks that create the paths along which transnational activities flow (transnational corporations, transnational capitalist class, migrant remittances)
Global public spaces and fora (international non-governmental organisations, transnational social movement organisations, ethnic diasporas and transnational communities)
Social fields that connect and position some actors in more than one country; creation of translocal understandings- 'translocalities'- and transnational social spaces
Source:Vertovec (1999, p 447)
Table 1.2: Typology of transnational entities
Epistemic communities Experts in different countries Scientific Think tanks, international linked through the production ideas consultancy firms, research and dissemination of institutes knowledge
Transnational advocacy Individuals in different Moral ideas Labour, human rights, networks, transnational countries linked through a gender justice, nuclear social movements common concern disarmament
Transnational Economic entities in different Profit Nike (footwear), Shell (oil), corporations countries linked through the Ford (automobiles), Fyffes
pursuit of economic gain (bananas) Transnational criminal Trafficking and smuggling networks of humans and
commodities such as drugs, tobacco
Transnational Professionals in different Technical Medicine, nursing, professions countries linked through expertise accountancy, law,
knowledge and expertise that engineering is not owned by any single society
Transnational Governmental actors in Common GB, G77, GZO; networks governmental networks different countries linked public of ministers of social
through a common issue or mandates development , trade, finance concern and so on
Source: Adapted from Khagram and Levitt (2005)
The idea of global social policy
Box 1.2: Globalisation
There is a great deal of controversy over the concept of globalisation and its onset, causes, effects and universal applicability (see Yeates, 2001, 2007a, 2008). At its core is an emphasis on the ways in which the conditions of human existence are characterised by dense, extensive networks of interconnections and interdependencies that routinely transcend national borders. These include:
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flows of capital, goods and services the global integration of business activities and economies flows of images, ideas, information and values through media and communications worldwide spread of ideologies such as consumerism, individualism and collectivism international movements of people (for leisure, work, treatment, personal safety) global political institutions, political cooperation, political movements and political action.
One of the main consequences of globalisation is how events happening in one part of the world are able to quickly produce effects in other parts of it. Technology enables the transmission of information around the world within seconds. As the Asian financial crisis of 1997 and the global financial crisis of 2007-08 showed, fluctuations in one economy reverberate around the world and jeopardise jobs and incomes on a mass scale worldwide.
If modern technologies help shape a sense of the world as a single, shared place, culture and politics still matter. Early studies of globalisation emphasised the convergence and 'flattening' of local and national cultures, social systems and welfare states. More emphasis is now placed on how these cultures and systems are 'remade' by global forces, with distinctive national features being retained alongside continued divergence (Yeates and Holden, 2009).
Globalisation Studies, as a field of academic study, builds on significant traditions of thought that understand the world as a single global system. For example, the development of Ecology as a science has seen ecological processes as planetary in scale, with changes in ecological conditions in one part of the planet affecting other parts of it. Here, the impact of human activity on ecological systems was also seen to have a planetary impact, in that toxic chemicals and pollution released in one locality are transported to and have 'impacts on' other proximate and distant parts of the world. Also, in the 1960s world systems and dependency theories were mapping the global systems and mechanisms of unequal exchange that tie the social
:. global social policy: second edition
fates and fortunes of populations in very different parts of the world (Wallerstein, 1979). World systems theory dates the existence of global social systems back (at least) several hundred years.
No new claims can be made for the kinds of interconnectedness associated
with globalisation. People, ideas, symbols, capital, goods and services have,
for many centuries, 'travelled' across the borders of nation states, facilitated
by successive developments in communications and travel technologies and
channelled by globe-spanning institutions and networks. However, today's
interconnectedness is said to be more extensive in scope than in previous
historical periods; the interconnections are also said to be more intensive,
and the speed at which such interactions occur is increasing. Globalisation
is char;1cterised by an increasing social cnmcsluncnt, expressed in ways that
appear to 'bring together' geographically distant places and peoples around
the world (Box 1.3).
Box 1.3: Dimensions of enmeshment
Extensity: the degree to which cultural, political, social and economic activities are 'stretching' across national borders to encompass more areas of the world.
Intensity: changes in magnitude and regularity of interconnectedness.
Velocity: changes in the speed of global interactions and processes.
Source: Held et al (1999)
In sum, understandings of the contemporary world have moved away from
a world made up of a multitude of bounded national social systems and
towards an understanding of a global social system that links populations
and places in diftc·1-ent parts of the world and comprises various global
and sub-global hierarchies and networks of border-spanning connections,
interactions and eHects. How has this understanding conH' to be reflected
in the study of welf:u-e states and social policies? And what does this mean
t(n- social policy as a political practice? These issues arc discussed in the
following t\VO sections.
The idea of global social policy
GLobaL social policy as a field of academic study and analysis
So far, we have seen that a global(isation) perspective challenges the idea
that the forces shaping the social organisation of welfare are uniquely or
primarily local and national ones, and directs attention to. modes of political
organisation, social action and economic and cultural forces transcending
countries.
In the context of social policy, the last two decades has seen the emergence
of a field of study, global social policy (see Box 1.5) , dedicated to the study
of how transnational modes of political organisation, action and forces are
implicated in changes to the aims, characteristics and outcomes of welfare
states and social policies. Often dated to the mid-1990s, this field in practice
built on a substantial body of theory and research by 'early pioneers' of global
social policy studies. For example, in the 1950s and 1960s Peter Towns end
was developing a ,1?/obal analysis of world poverty, combining the insights of
global sociology with those of development studies and social policy. In The
concept qf poverty, he set out an 'approach to development and stratitlcation
[to explain l how poverty arises, and is perpetuated, in low income and high
income countries' (Townsend, 1970, p 30), and argued that '[a] wealthy
society which deprives a poor country of resources may simultaneously
deprive its own poor classes through maldistribution of those additional
resources' (Townsend, 1970, p 42) .The riches of those living in high-income
countries are, he argued, inextricably linked to the poverty of those living
in low-income countries.
In the 1990s global social policy studies came to be more directly informed
by ongoing processes of economic and political globalisation, and began
emphasising a wide range of possible consequences of globalisation for
welfare states and social policies (Box 1. 4). The anticipated and actual effects
of globalisation are diverse and highly contested. They range from predictions
of the demise of welfare states where they exist and their stalled development
where they don't, to an emphasis on their adaptation and resilience, including,
more recently, an emphasis on the possibilities and realities of new areas of
social welfare provision; from an emphasis on probable convergence to an
emphasis on continued actual divergence; and from an insistence on the
continued centrality of governments in international social policy making
to an emphasis on how governments as policy actors seem to have been
displaced as supranational agencies and transnational actors have grown in
strength (Yeates, 2001, 2008a) .
global social policy: second edition
Box 1.4: Some possible effects of globalisation on social policy and welfare states
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•
•
Creates new or additional social risks and opportunities for individuals, households, workers and communities. Sets welfare states in competition with each other. This is said to threaten comprehensive systems of public service provision where they exist or stall their future development where they do not. Among the anticipated effects are:
lowering of social and labour standards; privatisation of public services; creation of global health, education and welfare markets; and growing reliance on voluntary and informal provision.
Raises the issues with which social policy is concerned to supranational and global institutions, agencies and fora. Brings new players into the making of social policy (for example, Bretton Woods institutions; various United Nations [UN] agencies; development banks; international commercial, voluntary and philanthropic organisations). Generates 'new' political coalitions within and between countries (regionally and globally) concerned with social policy reform.
Source: Yeates (2008a)
Box 1.5: Global social policy
Global social policy examines:
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how social policy issues are increasingly being perceived to be global in scope, cause and impact; the consequences and implications of international economic and political integration for welfare systems, social policies and human welfare:
cross-border flows of people, goods, services, ideas and finance for social policy development and the financing, regulation and provision of social welfare; transnational forms of collective action, including the development of multilateral and cross-border modes of governance (world-regional level [for example, European Union (EU), Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)], trans-regional [for example, Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM)] and global [the World Bank [WB], UN, International Monetai"'J Fund (IMF)]); and
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The idea of global social policy
the rise of global social movements, international non-governmental organisations ( INGOs) and nor,-state fora such as the World Social Forum (WSF ) or the World Economic Forum (W EF ) ; and how transnational action, cross-border governance and policy making shape the development of social policies and welfare systems around the world;
any social policy issues in social development and social governance from transnational and global perspectives.
With the engagement of social policy with globalisation processes so the
need to 'globalise' constructs has become more important. One example
of how this has been done is the concept of the welfare mix in Table 1.3; another is the reformulation articulated by Deacon et a! ( 1997) as follows:
The classical concerns of social policy analysts with social needs
and social citizenship rights becomes ]sic] in a globalized context
the quest for supranational citizenship. The classical concern
with equality, rights and justice between individuals becomes the
quest for justice between states. The dilemma about efficiency,
efiectiveness and choice becomes a discussion about how far
to socially regulate free trade. The social policy preoccupation
with altruis1n, reciprocity and the extent of social obligations are
put to the test in the global context. To what extent are social
obligations to the other transnational? (Deacon et al, 1997, p 195)
Table 1.3:The extended welfare mix
State
Market
Intermediate
Community
Household
National government, regional government, local authorities, town/city councils Domestic markets; local/national firms National service NGOs, consultancy compan ies
Local social movements, neighbourhood associations Household strategies
Source:Yeates (2007b)
International governmental organisations, regional formations; national donors Global markets; transnational corporations International non-governmental organisations (charitable and philanthropic bodies); international consultancy companies Global social movements, diasporic communities Transnational household survival strategies, international migration
global social policy: second edition
This kind of work has fed into vibrant scholarship oriented to rethinking
the historical foundations and contemporary development of welfare states,
and the nature and impacts of ostensibly 'national' social policy. At the same
time, shifts of emphasis are taking place in global social policy studies. Some
of the key ways in which this is occurring are briefly outlined below.
From global social policy as a practice of elite global institutions and actors ...
Deacon and colleagues ( 1997, p 1SJ5) defined global social policy as:
... a practice of supranational actors I which] embodies global
social redistribution, global social regulation, and global social
provision and/ or empowerment, and ... the ways in which
supranational organisations shape national social policy.
The focus of this definition lay with intergovernmental institutions such
as the Wl3, IMF and UN and international non-state actors such as Oxfun
working around social development issues. This definition drevv attention to
a highly active set of political fiJrces and policy actors that had either been
omitted fi·om explanations of national policy change or relegated to the status
of' context'. This work etlectively demonstrated how the battle over ideas
and policy was being waged at the global level and how national political
and policy actors were f�1ccd with competing policy reform prescriptions.
Deacon et al's definition had a strongly normative, political inflection to it, in
the sense that they were not only trying to assess the extent to which global
social policy could be said to actually exist but also to identifY the kinds of
reforms that should be instituted to effect principles of social democracy.
Global social policy embraces a wider range of social policy dialogues
The politiCll forces involved in global social policy formation and the arenas
through which it was being played out were much broader than those
being focused on by Deacon at the time (Yeates, 19SJ9). Accordingly, the
scope of global social policy analysis was broadened to include the range
of social dialogues taking place outside the boardrooms and bureaux of
international governmental organisations (IGOs).This wider definition
included the activities of non-elites in global social politics and policy
making, notably social movement and non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) operating in the numerous shadow congresses and social fora that
accompany international governmental meetings. It also opened up the
possibility of including citizen movements and N GO campaigns against
The idea of global social policy
(for example) local branches of multinational corporations (MNCs) as
a site of global social governance. The 'globalising' strategies of a wide
range of social policy actors are evident, whether they be firms and business
executives (planning efficiency reforms involving the shedding of staff and
relocation of production to another country or outsourcing production) ,
trade unions (protesting about the ofEhoring of jobs overseas), consumer
movements (initiating campaigns against child labour used in the production
of commodities or price fixing by cartels) or households (sending a member
of the family to work overseas to send home remittances that supplement
household income).
This analysis drew attention to the ways in which global social governance
was not only multitiered but also multisphered in the sense of encompassing
the wider social regulation of economic and political globalisation processes
-the activities of corporations and institutionalised political and bureaucratic
elites.This work (developed in Yeates, 2001) located the emergence of global
social policy within a perceived need to regulate increased social and political
conflict worldwide that accompanies contemporary globalisation processes.
Global social policy comes to emphasise codetermination and embeddedness
Extending this focus on a broader range of sites of global social policy and
governance, Mitchell Orenstein defined global policies as 'those that are
developed, diffused and implemented with the direct involvement of global
policy actors and coalitions at or across the international, national or local
levels of governance' (2005, p 177).This intervention was important because
it considered social policies enacted nationally and sub-nationally as 'global'
to the extent that they are codetermined by global policy actors and are
transnational in scope (2005, pp 177-8).
Hierarchies are implicit in vocabularies oflevel and tier-with supranational
entities placed at the top of the hierarchy and city authorities at the bottom,
with power, authority and influence travelling 'downwards'. Recent work
has since come to emphasise how these different levels are parts of an
overall system in which all parts affect each other, with influence 'travelling'
multidirectionally. This opens up questions about the ways in which, and
extent to which, actors located in domestic arenas influence the formation
of supranational policy, about the 'embeddedness' of transnational policy
actors in specific cultural/political territories and about how transnational
policy actors operate at different 'levels' of governance-often concurrently (Yeates, 2007b).
These works connect with literature that rejects conceptualisations of' the
global' as something'out there' , 'above' the state or society, and emphasises the
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global social policy: second edition
ways in which the global is 'in here', 'within' the nation state and something
that involves 'us' . This embedded notion of global social policy resonates
with scholarship on the existence of transnational spaces within nation states
and the playing out of transnational processes within national territories as
well as across them. In this sense, transnationalism can be found in 'national'
identities, social institutions, economic interactions and political processes
as well as in the more visible border-spanning structures and 'high-level'
fora and processes .
. . . and the necessity of locating global social policy in time and place
Global social policy is vulnerable to claims that it is decontextualised
tl-om time (history) and place (geography). The emphasis on the rise
of contemporary global institutions and globalised welfare states risks
exaggerating breaks with the past. Historians of welfare could reasonably
point to how the forces behind welf:1re state building and the social regulation
of capitalism operated within a world order characterised by extensive
international trade and migration, transnational corporations (TNCs)
and developed international monetary and exchange rate regimes. And while
much recent commentary focuses on contemporary transnational political
mobilisation in the anti-globalisation movement, there are examples of
political mobilisation datillg back two centuries that were international and
extended beyond Europe (Yeates, 2007 a).
At the same time, global social policy is played out variably across
different countries and regions. The experiences of, for example, African
countries differ from those in East Asia, which differ again from those in
North America, which differ from those in South America. Many African
countries, for example, have experienced the effects of global actors in very
particular ways, either being ignored by the globalising corporations or
being the subject of intense scrutiny and coercive policy prescriptions by
international financial institutions (lFis) .An attentiveness to geography- in
particular the political and economic geographies of global social policy
captures the spatially uneven outcomes of political and economic processes of
international integration, including the ways in which the interrelationship
between people, state and territory is being re-made by global social policies.
This better captures how some countries are more embracing of neoliberal
ideas and policies than others, and how some countries have been able to
forge alternative strategies in their social policies to those prescribed by
Uretton Woods institutions and Northern governments.
These different emphases and imperatives all find expression in the chapters
in this volume. Chapter authors place different emphases in their approach
to their topics in ways that reflect their personal intellectual or discipline-
The idea of global social policy
specific perspective. However, all chapters address the core tenets of global
social policy with their focus on how global forces, governance structures
and policy actors are implicated in the (re)making of social policy and its
impact on human welfare around the world.
Global social policy as a political practice
Global social policy is not just a field of academic study and research; it is a
'living' political practice. It comprises established institutions, commanding
in some cases very substantial resources, diverse policy actors, ranging from
governments, to large international bureaucracies, to NGOs, to advocacy and
campaign coalitions and global social movements seeking to represent
diverse interests (business, labour, environment, health, and so on) in social
policy initiatives, and 'real' programmes of social provision and social action.
Whether by influencing domestic policy or policies emanating from spheres
of cross-border governance, they all contribute to shaping how populations
and territories are governed, the broad direction and the specific content of
social policy, the terms of social development and the conditions of human
welfare.
Each of the chapters of this book survey and illuminate the nature of
contemporary global social policy making in practice in the context of
specific areas, issues or sectors. They survey global governance structures,
policy actors, policy issues, policy goals and content, and effects, consequences
and impacts relevant to the chapter topic. Collectively the chapters illustrate
the sheer breadth and richness of global social policy as a field of academic
study and research and as a set of 'living' political practices. They discuss
in tangible and illuminating ways the magnitude and nature of key social
issues with which contemporary global policy making is grappling, how
global policy responses are, in turn, addressing them, and the challenges
that lie ahead.
Part One of the book explores 'Contexts, institutions and actors' and is
comprised of four chapters. In Chapter Two, Chris Holden sets out the global
context of poverty and inequality. He discusses some of the main ways in
which global poverty and inequality have been measured, and explains why
these are so politically contested. The chapter presents and analyses key data
showing the extent of global poverty and inequality, and it considers the
implications of global measures of poverty and inequality for the politics of global social policy.
In Chapter Three, Bob Deacon examines the 'institutional architecture'
of global social policy from the perspective of its governance. He provides
a broad overview of the policy stances of principal international
organisations and outlines the extent to which global social policies are
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global social policy: second edition
promoting global redistribution, social regulation and social rights, including
attempts to ' green' global social policy in recent years. He reviews some recent
proposals to reform global social governance. The increased interest in the
potential of sub-global formations in addressing issues of poverty and social
inequality is reflected in this discussion.
In Chapter Four, Kevin Farnsworth focuses on the role and influence of
business interests and organisations in global social policy making. He examines
increasing corporate power and business influence on global social policy
formation, greater awareness of the social harms and injustices resulting from
corporate globalisation and global corporations' activities, the rise of corporate
philanthropy in global social policy, and global initiatives to regulate corporate
activity. He argues that global social policy making has increasingly reflected
business interests overall, while recognising that these interests arc in practice
quite diverse and are articulated in varied ways in global social policy.
Chapter Five, Chris Holden's second chapter for this volume, examines the
relationship between international trade and welfare. He provides a clear guide
to the development of the world trading system and the role welfare states
play in facilitating capitalist economies' adjustment to global conditions, while
protecting workers from the worst social risks and ensuring some modicum
of redistribution and social provision. He reviews a major area of political
contestation: the effects of international trade and investment agreements
on the provision of health, education and welfare services and the setting of
policy objectives in these areas.
Part Two of the book,' Policy domains and issues', covers substantive areas
of global social policy making. Each of the six chapters in this section amplifY
many of the broad issues and themes covered in Part One and discuss how
they 'translate' in practice in the context of the specific policy sector that is
the subject of the chapter.
In Chapter Six, Robert O'l3rien examines the area of global labour
policy. This field of global policy making has benefited from the existence
of an international organisation dedicated to promoting key labour rights
(the International Labour Organization [ILO]) for the best part of a
century, but, as he notes, the m;Uority of the world's population still does not
enjoy adequate working conditions. He examines how states, international
organisations, TNCs and civic actors, such as trade unions, are trying to
influence the direction and content of global labour policy. The chapter
discusses issues in global labour policy such as the extent of adherence to 'core'
labour standards and corporate regulation, and considers the effectiveness of
key initiatives such as the UN Global Compact.
In Chapter Seven, Meri Koivusalo and Eeva Ollila consider one of the
most visible areas of global social policy: health. Global health policy benefits
from a relatively extensive set of political commitments backed by a legal
The idea of global social policy
framework. It is also marked by intense engagement by a range of public and
private transnational policy actors- the UN, IFis and other !COs, business
corporations and commercial interests, and N GOs, and one of the challenges
is how to keep global health policies focused on health objectives rather than
trade or industrial objectives. The chapter outlines contemporary issues in
global health policy agendas and programmes, such as Health f()r All (HFA),
health reform and access to pharmaceutical drugs. Notable here is the recent
turn in policy stances by the WB, UN and EU in their global health policies
towards better supporting comprehensive health systems, social equity in access
to health and initiatives which address the wider social determinants ofhealth.
In Chapter Eight, Mitchell Orenstein and Bob Deacon examine global
policy on pensions and social protection. They show how transnational
campaigns for pension and social protection have taken shape in recent
decades, and chart the 'rise' and stagnation of pensions privatisation alongside
the recent campaign for a global Social Protection Floor (SPF). The chapter
details some of the methods used in these campaigns, and the ways in which
the balance of power between the WB and the ILO in this policy area seems
to be shifting. Importantly, the chapter shows that coalitions of domestic actors,
acting nationally as well as transnationally, can resist global policy reforms and
how reforms that aim to privatise social protection (pensions) can be stalled,
even reversed.
In Chapter Nine Roger Dale and Susan Robertson examine the key
institutions, actors and policies in global education policy. They contrast
different visions and models of education being promoted by different global
policies and global actors, the means by which these are progressed, and discuss
how these may be refi-aming education in policy and practice in diverse
country contexts worldwide.The increasing interest of commercial businesses
in education and the use of public-private partnerships is critically commented
on, and they discuss the distinction between constructing eduCJtion as public
services policy and constructing education as part of trade policy -and the
implications of these two different policy paradigms for what is taught, how it is taught and under what conditions teaching and learning take place.
In Chapter Ten, John Muncic analyses the realm of global criminal justice
policy. The chapter examines the nature and reach of ' global crime' and the
range of policy initiatives to address illicit cross-border trafficking of humans,
drugs, body parts and weapons on a global scale. It also discusses the forms
that cross-jurisdiction cooperation on crime control currently takes, including
initiatives on transnational policing and transnational justice. States are
pooling sovereignty on a range of 'law and order' matters, regionaJly and
internationally, and a 'loosely institutionalised and coordinated crime control
system' is emerging. Contrasting with criminological literatures by US and
UK academics, which emphasise the dominance of neoliberal punitivity in
global social policy: second edition
international policy travel,john Muncie argues that social democratic ideas and
practices of criminal justice have not been 'flattened' or eclipsed by neoliberal
ones. In this, the chapter resonates with literature emphasising how globalisation
processes have an impact on national regimes in markedly difterent way s, and
provides fi.1rther evidence of the mediating role of domestic cultural, political
and socio-institutional formations therein.
In Chapter Eleven, Anne Hendrixson Sarah Sexton, Larry Lohmann and
Nicholas Hildyard examine global population policy. Population control
is among the oldest for ms of global social policy, and the chapter traces
changing concerns and manifestations of global population policy over two
centuries. The authors show how Malthusian and neo-Malthusian ideas
have been taken up by elite groups and spread across the world, facilitated by
northern governments through overseas development aid programmes and by
international organisations such as the WH and UN.The chapter highlights the
enduring influence of over-population' discourses in global policy making and
how these are taken up in a wide range of areas ranging from the environment,
through crime control and national security, to the control of women's fertility.
The plethora of different initiatives and programmes, priorities and issues,
identified and discussed in the chapters, testifies to burgeoning global policy
activity and to the challenges that lie ahead. Fragmented sy stems of global
governance, deeply entrenched global poverty, inequality and social injustice
combine with a reluctance to embrace a global shared responsibility for
addressing critical social policy issues, the commercialisation and privatisation
of public services, the philanthrocapitalisation of global social financing, the
renewal of global trade and investment agreements, and an apparent preference
in many areas of global policy making for non-binding agreements and
voluntary initiatives. However, recent history shows that politics and ideas
still matter, now as much as ever. Global policy is now promoting more
universalistic model, of health and social protection that disrupt the once
seemingly inexorable tide of neoliberalism, while the global social harms
caused by the global financial crisis and systems of social organisation and
governance that enabled it may spur further innovations that address the
specific challenges identified in the chapters.
Translating current promising initiatives into a robust and sustained
commitment to shared global social responsibility f(x social development and
hmnan welf1re will need to involve substantial programmes of global social
redistribution, rights and regulation. Now more than ever there is an urgent
need for sustained and vigorous collective action - globally, nationally and
locally- to capitalise on opportunities to advance progressive forms of action
in support of human welf:u·e, social policy and wider social development. In
this, the need for a wider and deeper understanding of global social policy is
as pressmg as ever.
The idea of global social policy
Using this book
This book is written with non-specialist readers in mind looking for an
accessible way in to key approaches, debates and issues in global social policy
as a field of academic study and as a political practice. Several design features
of the book help achieve this:
• Each of the chapters starts with a brief overview of its contents and ends
with a summary of the key points covered.
• Chapters make good use of case study material from research, campaigns
and policy, and incorporate illustrative and visual material to aid the
development of knowledge and understanding.
• Questions for discussion to aid understanding of the chapter contents,
further activities to follow up on issues, and further reading and resources.
• Global social policy, like other academic subjects, makes frequent use of
abbreviations - a full list of those used in this volume are located at the
front of the book.
• A comprehensive glossary of the key terms used in the book, located at
the back of the book. The terms are highlighted in bold in each of the
chapters the first time they are used.
• A comprehensive index helps easily locate topics of particular interest.
The chapters in this edition of Understandin� �lobal social policy refer to
materials published in the Global social policy reader (Yeates and Holden,
2009). The Global social policy reader comprises academic publications by
international leaders in global social policy and key global policy documents.
Together these provide comprehensive coverage of and a guide to key
concepts, actors, initiatives and processes in the field.
Finally, the most useful summary overview of many current developments
in global social policy making covered in this book is the Global Social Policy
(GSP) Digest. GSP Digest is freely available variously at: www.ilo.org, www.
crop.org and www.gsp-observatory.de.
• The 'global turn' in social science has opened social policy analysis to the ways that
social processes, ties and links between people, places and institutions routinely cut
across welfare states.
• Global social policy broadens and invigorates the study of social policy, bringing in a
new range of concerns, issues and approaches to social policy and welfare provision.
• Global social policy analysts examine how global forces, governance structures and
policy actors are implicated in the (re)making of social policy and its impact on human
welfare around the world.
Understanding global social policy: second edition
• Global social policy examines a wide range of transnational social policy actors and
processes operating across on a range of spheres, sites and scales.
• Global social policy making is embedded in cultural and political contexts. lt is
historically specific. Place still matters.
• Global social policy is not just an academic subject; it is a set of 'living' political ideas
and practices. lt is an ongoing (if incomplete) project of major social significance,
and a major focus of collective social action and campaigning on a worldwide scale.
• Are the effects of globalisation processes on welfare systems and policy making
always negative?
• What do people who study and research global social policy examine?
• Why are a sense of history, geography and politics important in global social policy?
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Townsend, P. (1970) The concept of poverty, London: Heinemann.
Vertovec, S. (1999) 'Conceiving and researching transnationalism', Ethnic and Racial
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Wallerstein, I. (1979) The capitalist world-economy, Cambridge: Cambridge University
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Yeates, N. (1999) 'Social politics and policy in an era of globalisation', Social Policy and
Administration, vol 33, no 4, pp 372-93.
Yeates, N. (2001) Globalisation and social policy, London: Sage Publications.
Yeates, N. (2007a) 'Globalisation and social policy', in J. Baldock, N. Manning, S. Miller
and S. Vickerstaff (eds) Social policy (3rd edn), Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Yeates, N. (2007b) 'The global and supra-national dimensions of the welfare mix', in M.
Powell ( ed) Understanding the mixed economy of welfare, Bristol: Policy Press.
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